Editorial Reviews
THE GUARDIAN
PUBLISHED October 31 th, 2003 in The Guardian
BY ANDREW PULVER
What with the costs of printing, cinema books don't
always do their product justice pictorially, but this 450 page tome
from fine-art specialists Aurum is one of the most spectacular.
Essays
by Bertolucci, Sven Nykvist and Jack Cardiff precede a list of the
100 greatest achievements of European film, selected by the cinematographers'
association Imago. Each film gets at least a double-page spread (some,
like Lawrence of Arabia, mget a gatefold), and all of the pictures
retain their original ratio (no pan-and-scan here).
First off is the
Italian silent Cabiria , from 1913-
stills complete with tints. Page after page reveals one amazing
film after another - FW Murnau's Faust , Dreyer's Day
of Wrath , Visconti's Senso , Demy's The Umbrellas
of Cherbourg , Bergman's Cries and Whispers - before
finishing off with Joe Stelling's little-known The Flying Dutchman .
It
all adds up to a real treasure trove and a fine summary of the
glories of European cinema.
AMERICAN CINEMATOGRAPHER REVIEW
BY RAY ZONE
PUBLISHED IN " American Cinematographers" OCTOBER
2003
Though it's not exactly "the first comprehensive examination
of the cinematographer's art," as the jacket copy proclaims,
this book is an exhaustive and very well illustrated encyclopedia
of cinematography, covering its history, technology, aesthetics,
major practitioners and seminal works as photographed on the other
side of the pond.
With 500 illustrations - 115 in color - this deluxe
volume belongs on every cinematographer's coffee table. While most
of the illustrations are frame enlargements from films, there are
also many production photos and a few technical line drawings.
The
organization IMAGO was formed in December 1992 as the European
Federation of National Cinematographers Associations; it was founded
on the initiative of Luciano Tovoli, ASC,AIC, its first president,
and four European cinematographer societies: Italy 's AIC, France
's AFC , the United Kingdom 's BSC and Germany 's bvk. To date,
Imago's members include 23 societies from all over Europe .
One
of Imago's first major projects was the creation of this book."We
wanted to show the work of the cinematographer as a person who
creates photographic images often of such astonishing vitality
and beauty, working with light to create the atmosphere of the
subject on film" writes Harvey Harrison, BSC in the foreword.
A special jury of cinematographers chose 100 films for the book,
which showcases some of the greatest achievements in European cinematography.
Tovoli
observes that this book, in highlighting "such a challenging,
demanding and deeply individualistic profession," represents" a
sign of great maturity for colleagues to try to make audiences
aware of what is really going on during the shooting of a film,
to add the pleasure of knowledge to the emotion of seeing movies."
In
an essay titled "The Cinematographer's View," Jack
Cardiff, BSC, whose credits include "The Red Shoes" discusses
the art of lighting. "The naturalness of light has to be constructed
by the use of artificial light so that it looks like the real thing," he
writes "and these lights must be cunningly and subtly arranged
to emphasize the dramatic atmosphere". Despite the allure
of powerful lighting effects, Cardiff says, "they must never
intrude on the general atmosphere of natural lighting."
Cardiff
tells some great war stories, in particular one about an ironic
relationship between a director and a cinematographer who were
filming on location in America . " A cameraman told
a director he could not shoot because so many clouds racing across
the sky, blotting out the sun, which would then burst out again,
making an exposure impossible." The director liked the effect
and insisted on shooting. The cameraman shot the scene but wrote
on the slate, "Shot under Protest" Cardiff writes, "Because
of that magnificent sequence, the cameraman won an Oscar!"
Sven
Nyqvist, ASC writes that "the most important task of
the cinematographer is to create an atmosphere" He also writes
about his relationship with director Ingmar Bergman, for whom he
filmed such classics as Through a Glass Darkly , Winter
Light and Cries and Whispers. Giuseppe Rotunno,
ASC, AIC, whose credits include All That Jazz , Casanova and Satyricon ,
writes, "Photography is a luminous drawbridge through which
the story has to reach the audience, and the audience has to reach
the story .
The book presents other perspectives on the cinematographer's
art as well. Director Bernardo Bertolucci discusses his collaborations
with Vittorio Storaro,ASC,AIC and Marcello Mastroianni presents
the actor's view of the cinematographer. Michael Leitch contributes
a 70 page history of European cinematography. Many rare archival
photos are included with his piece, and frequent sidebars list
key films, their directors of Photography, their technologies and
country and origin.
After perusing Leitch's history, the reader
will feel compelled to revisit the films he discusses and to pay
close attention to the craftsmanship in each. An especially delicious
chapter, "Color:
The early years to the 1950's, "features frame enlargements
from Jean Renoir's The Golden Coach , photographed by
Claude Renoir, and Albert Lamorisse's The Red Balloon ,
filmed by Edmond Sechan.
Cathy Greenhalgh discusses the aesthetics
of cinematography in the essay "Sooting from the Heart: Cinematographers
and their Medium." The piece opens with a great quote from
John Bailey, ASC: "Cinematographers have an especially magical
tool to facilitate self expression and discovery. It is light,
at once lambent and elusive, and also static and solid. Our work,
our experiments in space and time, our aesthetic statements, are
encapsulated by it. And ultimately, it is one key to our unique
personal history".
Illustrated in part by paintings from the Dutch masters and Renaissance
artists, Greenhalgh's essay explores the thoughts of many cinematographers
and visual principles of composition, rhythm and color. Many frame
enlargements amplify the complex ideas she considers.
The bulk of
this book is a chronological presentation of 100 films spanning
the first century of European cinematography. The jury who selected
these films consisted of Jaromir Sofr, ACK ( Czech Republic );
Tony Foprsberg, FSF ( Sweden ), and Wolfgang Fisher, bvk. The first
film presented, Cabiria (1913) was chosen
for its many "first's", including artificial light for
artistic effects and tracking shots. With scenes depicting the
eruption of Mount Etna and the burning of the roman fleet, the
film displays great mastery of special effects for its time. Frame
enlargements showing composite photography, hand-tinted frames
and unique lighting effects illustrate the great beauties of this
film.
Other famous films the jury singles out include The Battleship
Potemkin, Napolean,The Passion of Joan of Arc, The Bicycle Thief,
La Strada. Wild Strawberries, Last Year at Marienbad, Lawrence
of Arabia, The <red Desert, Le Samourai, 2001: A Space Odyssey,
The Conformist, Amarcord, Solaris, The Shinning, Diva, Das Boot,
Chariots of Fire, Delicatessen and Three Colors: Red. Overall,
this book is a unique list of great films analysed from the cinematographer's
standpoint. You'd have to look back to the March 1999 80 th anniversary
issue of American Cinematographer to find anything similar.
MAKING PICTURES AWARDED
Moving
Image Book Awards 2003
IMAGO's book has been awarded a Special
Commendation in the 2003 Krazna-Krausz Moving Image Book Awards.
Vienna , March 29th, 2004
On March 17th, 2004 , we got the privilege - due to a very generous sponsorship
by Joe Dunton BSC - to collect a Diploma of the Krazna-Krausz Foundation at
the Hungarian Embassy in London .
His Excellency Béla Szombati, the Hungarian Ambassador, Colin Ford CBE,
Chairman of the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation and the distinguished Hungarian film
director, Miklós Jancsó, maker of many radiant and legendary
feature films including Szegénylegények / The Roundup (1965)
or Csillagosok, katonák / The Red and the White (1967) - see
our book - have presented the prizes.
The Kraszna-Krausz Foundation was created by Andor Kraszna (1904-1989), a man
who foresaw the importance of the language of pictures long before the inception
of
the phrase 'the medium is the message'. His imprint, Focal Press, still dominates
the photographic press. According to the foundation, the winning books are
those which make original and lasting educational, professional, historical,
technical, scientific, social, literary or cultural contributions to the field.
For more information see: http://www.editor.net/k-k/
Together with six other books, IMAGO's book has been nominated for
a Special Commendation out of 270 books from 11 countries by the three judges.
The jury finally
chose one winner per category. The judges were:
Tom Gunning , film historian and specialist in early and silent
cinema, Edwin A and Betty L Bergmann Distinguished Service Professor in Art
History and member of the
Committee on Cinema and Media at the University of Chicago (USA);
André Lange , Head of Department at the European Audiovisual
Observatory in Strasbourg, writer on the film, television and record industries
and editor of the website History of Television (France);
Jim Slater , Managing Editor of Image Technology and Cinema
Technology , the journals of the BKSTS - the Moving Image Society, and
writer on television and
broadcasting (UK).
The jury comments on our book as follows: ". a beautifully illustrated
and produced book, packed with detailed information, which offers a real tribute
to cinematographers in Europe , with excellent analyses of
how films can be turned into masterpieces. A thoroughly enjoyable book to dip
into and to use as a detailed work of reference. "
Unfortunately - and for us not comprehensible - the jury has considered the
IMAGO book in the category " Business, Techniques & Technology " instead
of the " Culture &
History " category. This categorisation is probably the reason why
our unique and extensively illustrated book (we saw all the other books) about
the historical and
cultural development of the visual European film language has not been awarded
with the prestigious Kraszna-Krausz award.
SPONSORS OF THE IMAGO BOOK
AATON ; ACADEMIA
DELLA IMMAGINE ; AGFA
FRANCE ; ANKERSTJERNE ; ARRI ;ARRICAM ; CINEMATOGRAPHER'S
DAY ; DESISTI ; JOE
DUNTON CAMERAS ; FUJI; GTC ; KODAK ; LEE
LIGHTING ; LTC ; LTM ; MOVIECAM ; NORDISK
FILM FOUNDATION; PANAVISION ; PANTHER ; RANK
ORGANISATION ; ROSCO LAB; SACHTLER; SAMUELSON;
T ECNNOVISION.
From Publishers
Weekly
Filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard once said, "Cinema is the
truth, twenty-four times a second." From that brief quote springs
this weighty, almost academic work on the history and importance
of European film, starting from the optical entertainments in the
19th century and ending with 21st-century technical innovations.
In between is packed a wealth of visual imagery, info rmation and
analysis. Although it features gorgeously produced stills from a
multitude of movies, this doorstopper shouldn't be mistaken for a
coffee-table book.
It's a cinematographer's handbook and a cinephile's summer reading,
so those who don't wish to crawl through detailed info rmation about
every technical aspect of European filmmaking are best directed elsewhere.
But for the devoted film lover, there's much satisfying material
here, including analyses about lighting night setups, the cinematographer's
role and in-depth explorations of 100 films including The Battleship
Potemkin, The Blue Angel and The Umbrellas of Cherbourg.
Rather than provide movie info rmation in standard review or flat
description formats, the authors choose to jam-pack one page per
movie with intricate detail about the film's director of photography,
notable technical aspects and commentary about the use of light,
backgrounds and mood, with comments from the likes of Ingmar Bergman's
frequent collaborator, cinematographer Nykvist, among many others.
The result is a stunning look at the way in which movies are made,
both technically and creatively, and how European cinema in particular
has influenced global filmmaking.
Copyright 2003 Reed Bus ines s Information, Inc.
Book Description
The first comprehensive examination of the cinematographer's art,
Making Pictures presents incisive analyses of 100 visually stunning
films-radical classics like Battleship Potemkin (1925), Jules et
Jim (1965), and The Elephant Man (1980)-along with a complete technical
and creative history of the cameraperson's unique craft. Illustrated
with 500 images in both color and black-and-white, it features a
wealth of location shots and expository stills. Contributions by
such seminal figures as director Bernardo Bertolucci, actor Marcello
Mastroianni, and Ingmar Bergman's long-term collaborator, cinematographer
Sven Nykvist, make this a unique study.
|